Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Manchester Quarterly, Vol. 23: A Journal of Literature and Art
Sligo itself stands picturesquely at the mouth of Sligo River. It is a fair-sized town containing many handsome modern buildings and the fine ruin of its famous abbey. The most notable features of this once noble structure are the exquisitely moulded east window of the great church and the almost perfect Cloisters. Near the town in the two counties of Sligo and Leitrim is Lough Gill with its lovely wooded shores and its attendant troop of islands. Above the woodland gray limestone mountains tower in the distance and guard a vale of exceptional beauty. The road round the lake passes many monuments of great interest. First comes the comparatively m'odern seventeenth century Green Fort, with its four rounded bastions, which is said to have been made by Oliver Cromwell when he shattered the abbey with his cannon. The road therefrom leads through the finely timbered estate of Hazelwood and gives continual peeps of Lough Gill. Deep in a dell on the right is Calry Lough, a dark sheet of water, over which a little ruined church still sadly gazes, as it has gazed for many centuries.
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